Aarhus University Hospital - AUH
Julian Weyer

Aarhus University Hospital - AUH

C.F. Møller Architects as Architects

Hospital City on a Human Scale - the New University Hospital in Aarhus

The Emergency Centre, which is the first major element of the New University Hospital in Aarhus, is ready for use. This is a construction project for Denmark's first super-hospital – an ultra-modern hospital that will be a pioneering project both in Denmark and internationally when it comes to the concept of "healing architecture" in the healthcare sector.

 

Systematic use of the working method called "Knowledge and Evidence-Based Design" has allowed the concept of "healing architecture" to influence every decision concerning the physical design of the hospital. From the layout of the single-bed wards, the use of daylight and the flow of light in all of the hospital's rooms, to the design of the landscape and garden areas around the hospital.

 

The basic aim has been to meet as many as possible of the patients' needs and requirements, promote the involvement of patients' relatives, and ensure optimum working conditions and streamlined workflows for all employees.

 

A town in the town
The New University Hospital in Aarhus is being added to the existing Aarhus University Hospital in Skejby to create one overall hospital complex. The hospital will be as big as a Danish provincial town, with the same layout as an archetypical town, with an elevated, densely built-up centre.

 

The hospital complex is therefore structured as a town, with a hierarchy of quarters, streets, plazas and squares as the basis for a diverse and dynamic green urban centre, and it will serve as university hospital, regional centre and basic hospital for the region's population.

 

The hospital is designed and organised to flexibly meet future requirements of technology, treatment methods and working methods.

 

People in focus
The architecture's starting point is people, with the human scale as its measuring gauge. The structure of the new hospital not only ensures that patients and visitors can find their way around the complex, but also that they can settle down and help themselves in the hospital city.

 

The overall complex is divided into professional communities, each with their own identities. This ensures a clear structure, consisting of three primary elements: a two-storey base with treatment functions; the wards above the base up to a height of four storeys; and in the middle, the coming "Forum" central arrival area, where public functions are located at the foot of three multi-storey blocks. These include a main reception area, conference centre, shops, bank, cinema and other service functions surrounded by green areas. 

 

Easy to find your way
The starting point for the structure of the New University Hospital was the existing hospital. The human scale is therefore retained in the base's two-and three-storey redbrick buildings. The higher buildings in the centre are light, with coloured markings, to make way-finding easy. The overall harmonious balance between architecture, logistics, digital information platforms, art and landscape make it easy for patients and relatives to find their way around the hospital.

 

Healing hospital landscape
At the New University Hospital, patients, staff and visitors will have access to or views of the surrounding landscape and more proximate garden spaces.
Large, newly-established rainwater lakes will create densely vegetated, recreational meadow areas that are accessible for the hospital's users and local residents. Car park areas will be connected with trees. The hospital's many large courtyard spaces are designed as fertile, green gardens, inspired by unicellular animals and pollen - the smallest forms of life in the great hospital.

 

The gardens fulfil patients' need for calm, recreation and restitution close to the individual hospital departments, and offer spaces for relatives and staff to pause for thought and rest.

 

The New University Hospital is a low-energy building design, which in addition features 3.300 m2 of solar cells delivering approx. half a million kWh of power per year, a refined sustainable urban drainage concept which includes 18 ha of new public landscape with woods and lakes, and an innovative new concept for pre-purifying wastewater from the hospital to filter out medical residues.

 

C.F. Møller, Cubo Architects and landscape architects Schønherr, as well as Rambøll, Alectia and Søren Jensen RådgivendeIngeniørfirma, won this project in an international project competition held in 2007.

 

The first phase was officially opened on 27 February 2017. The next phases will be achieved on an ongoing basis, and the full project is expected to be completed in 2020.

 

What is Knowledge and Evidence-Based Design?

Knowledge and Evidence-Based Design at the New University Hospital in Aarhus is about using the best information available from research and evaluation of previous construction projects to create optimum, healing architecture.

Products Behind Projects
Product Spotlight
News
Makoto Yamaguchi Design completes Tokyo gaming HQ with contemporary appearance of traditional Japanese pagoda
14 May 2024 News
Makoto Yamaguchi Design completes Tokyo gaming HQ with contemporary appearance of traditional Japanese pagoda

Tokyo-based Makoto Yamaguchi Design has completed the new headquarters of a Japanese gaming company... More

25 best aluminum window manufacturers
13 May 2024 Specification
25 best aluminum window manufacturers

Aluminum windows and window systems are lightweight, corrosion-resistant, and structurally strong. S... More

Detail: Red facade and triangular plot create distinctive apartment building in Barcelona
10 May 2024 Detail
Detail: Red facade and triangular plot create distinctive apartment building in Barcelona

Barcelona-based architectural studios MIAS Architects and Coll-Leclerc have completed the developmen... More

Snøhetta completes Norway’s first naturally climatized mixed-use building
8 May 2024 News
Snøhetta completes Norway’s first naturally climatized mixed-use building

Global transdisciplinary architecture and design practice Snøhetta has completed Norway&rsquo... More

Studioninedots designs “Octavia Hill” on intricate site in new Hyde Park district, Hoofddorp
8 May 2024 News
Studioninedots designs “Octavia Hill” on intricate site in new Hyde Park district, Hoofddorp

Amsterdam-based architecture and urban design practice Studioninedots has designed a building as par... More

Waterworks Food Hall promises Toronto a new landmark cultural destination within a beautiful heritage space
8 May 2024 News
Waterworks Food Hall promises Toronto a new landmark cultural destination within a beautiful heritage space

Opening this June, Waterworks Food Hall promises a new multi-faceted dining experience and landmark... More

Wood Marsh emphasizes color and form in new Melbourne rail stations
7 May 2024 News
Wood Marsh emphasizes color and form in new Melbourne rail stations

Melbourne-based architectural studio Wood Marsh has completed the development of Bell and Preston ra... More

C.F. Møller Architects and EFFEKT design new maritime academy based on a modular construction grid
6 May 2024 News
C.F. Møller Architects and EFFEKT design new maritime academy based on a modular construction grid

Danish architectural firms C.F. Møller Architects and EFFEKT feature in Archello’s 25 b... More